Why preventive care is important

Remember the old saying that "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure"? This can be especially true when it comes to preventive health care. Maintaining or improving your health is important - and a focus on regular preventive care, along with following the advice of your doctor, can help you stay healthy.

Many poor pregnant women with HIV go untreated for depression

Jun 13, 2012 Viewed: 588

It seems logical that programs to screen and manage depression in pregnant, HIV-positive Medicaid patients should already be in place, but they aren’t.

It’s the kind of glaring oversight that Rajesh Balkrishnan, associate professor at the University of Michigan College of Pharmacy, said he finds all the time in his research on health disparities. Balkrishnan also has an appointment in the School of Public Health.

“We find that many of these things are such common sense that they should already be in place and being done,” said Balkrishnan. “Yet, time and again, we find nothing is being done, though these problems exist.”

In a recent paper, Balkrishnan and co-authors found that roughly 28 percent of the low-income, HIV-positive pregnant women reported depression. The numbers could be much higher because the study only captured the women who were being treated for depression.

About 20 percent of the 431 African-American women and 43 percent of the 219 white women in the study reported depression. However, the incidence of depression could be higher for African-American women - twice as many of whom are on Medicaid and pregnant compared to whites, Balkrishnan said.

Previous studies have shown that African-American women are less likely to seek treatment or report depressive symptoms in the first place; are more likely to report physician stereotyping and sometimes a general mistrust of physicians and the medical community; and do not receive the same quality of care as white women.

This means if they do report depression, they may not be taken seriously or receive the best treatments, Balkrishnan said. Physicians also have reported feeling undertrained to communicate with African-American and nonwhite women about depression.

“Because African-American women are less likely to seek treatment for their depression, it makes it even more of an issue,” Balkrishnan said. “Basically, the takeaway is that depression is very common in this very vulnerable population. I think we need to make sure depression is screened and treated in this population.”

Left untreated, depression can lead to suicide or substance abuse that could harm the mother or the fetus, or both.
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The paper, “Racial Differences in Perinatal Depression among HIV-Infected Women,” appears online in the journal Health Outcomes Research in Medicine.

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Laura Bailey.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
734-647-1848
University of Michigan

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